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May 10, 2007
REAL-TIME SEISMIC
MONITORING STATION INSTALLED ATOP
ACTIVE UNDERWATER VOLCANO
This
week, researchers will begin direct monitoring of the rumblings of a
submarine
volcano in the southeastern Caribbean
Sea. On
May 6, a team of scientists led by the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution
(WHOI) installed a new underwater earthquake monitoring system on top
of Kick'em
Jenny, a volcano just off of the north coast of the island nation of Grenada.
The
new mooring- and seismic monitoring technology will significantly
improve the
ability of natural hazard managers to notify and protect the
island’s residents
from volcanic eruptions and tsunamis.
Part of a project to develop new technology for earthquake monitoring
in
coastal areas, the Real Time Offshore Seismic Station (RTOSS) uses an
ocean-bottom seismometer (OBS) deployed directly on top of the
volcano—250
meters beneath the sea surface—to collect real-time data from
Kick'em Jenny.
RTOSS employs a special mooring design that
allows seismic data to be transmitted by
high-frequency radio to a land-based observatory in the village
of Sauteurs.
The data will reach the shore within milliseconds of being collected,
which
will significantly improve the ability of researchers to monitor
seismic
activity as it happens, a basic requirement for reducing hazards from
volcanic
gas and rock bursts and from tsunami-generating seafloor avalanches.
“This is the first time that radio telemetry has been used to
transmit data
from an underwater seismic monitoring station,” said Rob
Reves-Sohn, an
associate scientist in the WHOI Department of Geology and Geophysics
and an
RTOSS project leader. Scientists will be able to observe the
“inhaling and
exhaling” of the volcano as it draws in and expels seawater,
magma, and
superheated fluids. “By putting a seismometer right on the
volcano, we will significantly
improve our ability to detect precursory activity before an eruption
takes
place.”
The WHOI research team is coordinating with the National Disaster
Management
Agency in Grenada
and the
Seismic Unit of the University of the West
Indies
so that the data is incorporated into the existing regional monitoring
network.
A key element of RTOSS, developed by engineers at WHOI, is the
flexible,
stretchy hose that connects the seafloor anchor and instruments to the
buoy on
the sea surface. This hose is designed to compensate for the movement
of waves,
tides, and currents (which are notoriously rough around Kick'em Jenny),
and
stretches to more than two times its original length without snapping.
Electrical conductors are spiraled through the wall of the hose so that
the
wires straighten out, rather than break, when the hose stretches. A
surface
buoy on the end of the mooring uses solar panels to power the radio
transmitters that send the data approximately seven kilometers (four
miles) to
a shore station near the coast.
The mooring system was developed by engineers Keith von der Heydt and
Dan Frye
of the WHOI Instrument Systems Development Laboratory, along with
geologist Uri
ten Brink of the U.S. Geological Survey. Other team members include
Spahr Webb
of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, who designed the seismometer,
and
Richard Robertson at the Seismic Research Unit of the University of the
West Indies, who
manages the regional monitoring network.
Kick'em Jenny provides scientists with a unique natural laboratory to
study the
activity at a shallow submarine volcano that will one day emerge from
the ocean
as a new volcanic island. It is the only “live”
submarine volcano in the West Indies,
and it has erupted at least twelve times
since 1939. The last major eruption occurred in 2001.
The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution is a private, independent
organization
in Falmouth,
Mass.,
dedicated to marine research,
engineering, and higher education. Established in 1930 on a
recommendation from
the National Academy of Sciences, its primary mission is to understand
the
oceans and their interaction with the Earth as a whole, and to
communicate a
basic understanding of the ocean's role in the changing global
environment.
##
Contact:
Joanne
Tromp
Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution
508-289-3340
media@whoi.edu
This text
derived from:
http://www.whoi.edu/
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